What you need to know: A UK pre-retiree's annuity vs drawdown decision, 2026/27
Quick answer: For a UK pre-retiree in 2026/27: annuity rates are at 30-year highs (a 65-year-old single-life RPI-linked annuity pays ~£5,500-£6,000 per £100k); drawdown gives flexibility but transfers all investment risk to you ; 25% tax-free lump sum (up to £268,275 LSA) is available at age 55 (rising to 57 from 2028). Most retirees…
Key points:
- Drawdown income uses your Personal Allowance. Withdrawing £12,570/year of taxable pension income while State Pension hasn't started is tax-free.
- Big single withdrawals can over-tax via emergency code. Pension providers apply Month 1 emergency tax on first withdrawals. The over-tax is reclaimable via P55 form or year-end reconciliation.
- Death before 75 — pension passes free of income tax to beneficiaries.
For a UK pre-retiree in 2026/27: annuity rates are at 30-year highs (a 65-year-old single-life RPI-linked annuity pays ~£5,500-£6,000 per £100k); drawdown gives flexibility but transfers all investment risk to you; 25% tax-free lump sum (up to £268,275 LSA) is available at age 55 (rising to 57 from 2028). Most retirees should consider a partial annuity for floor income + drawdown for upside rather than a binary choice. The Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA) drops your pension contribution allowance from £60,000 to £10,000 the moment you flexibly access pension — a major trap.
The five ways to access a UK pension pot
| Method | What it does | MPAA trigger? |
|---|---|---|
| Annuity (lifetime) | Trade pot for guaranteed lifetime income | No |
| Flexi-Access Drawdown (FAD) | Stay invested, withdraw flexibly | Yes (when first income taken) |
| UFPLS | Take ad-hoc lump sums (25% tax-free, 75% taxable) | Yes (when first withdrawal taken) |
| 25% Tax-Free Cash only | Take just the tax-free portion, no income yet | No (until income taken) |
| Small pots / trivial commutation | Take very small pots (under £10k) in cash | No (special rules) |
Most retirees use a combination. The most common pattern in 2026: take 25% tax-free lump sum, partially annuitise to cover essential expenses, leave the rest in drawdown for flexibility and inheritance potential.
Annuity rates in 2026/27 — actually look attractive
Annuity rates are driven primarily by gilt yields. From 2010-2021, ultra-low gilt yields crushed annuity rates and made drawdown the default choice. From 2022-25, gilt yields recovered to multi-decade highs, taking annuity rates with them.
| Annuity type (age 65, £100k pot) | Annual income approx |
|---|---|
| Single life, level (no inflation linking) | £7,300 - £7,800 |
| Single life, RPI-linked | £5,500 - £6,000 |
| Joint life (50% spouse continuation), level | £6,500 - £7,000 |
| Joint life RPI-linked | £4,800 - £5,300 |
| Enhanced annuity (health issues / smoker) | +15-30% on standard rate |
Take 25% tax-free lump sum: £75,000
Buy single-life RPI-linked annuity with £150,000: ~£8,500/year guaranteed for life, rising with RPI
Leave £75,000 in drawdown for flexibility / discretionary spending
Combined with State Pension £11,975: floor income of ~£20,500 guaranteed and inflation-protected
Drawdown — flexibility plus all the risk
Flexi-Access Drawdown keeps your pension invested. You decide how much to withdraw and when. Three risks make it less suitable for risk-averse retirees:
- astly different outcomes. If markets fall heavily early in retirement while you're drawing income, the pot may never recover even if average returns are positive. The same average return can produce vastly different outcomes depending on the order in which it arrives.
- Longevity risk. A 65-year-old has a 50% chance of living to ~85 and a 25% chance of living to 92. Drawdown at 4-5%/year can run out in 20-25 years of bad markets.
- Behavioural risk. Retirees often crystallise losses by withdrawing during market crashes, or hoard cash and miss the recovery. Investment discipline is harder when you depend on the income.
The MPAA trap — the £50,000-£10,000 collapse
The moment you take ANY flexible income from a pension (FAD income, UFPLS, or beyond the 25% tax-free cash), the Money Purchase Annual Allowance triggers. Your pension annual allowance for ongoing contributions drops from £60,000 to £10,000.
The 25% tax-free lump sum alone does NOT trigger MPAA. Buying an annuity does NOT trigger MPAA. Only taking taxable pension income via flexible methods triggers it.
The four decisions worth making
- Take 25% tax-free, but check the Lump Sum Allowance. The £268,275 LSA limits total tax-free lump sums across all pensions. Above this, the tax-free element stops. Check accumulated lifetime LTA usage if you crystallised pensions pre-2024.
- Partial annuity for floor income. Annuitise the amount needed to cover essential expenses (mortgage, food, utilities, council tax). This eliminates sequence-of-returns risk on the "must have" portion of retirement income.
- Drawdown for everything else. Holiday, hobbies, discretionary spending in drawdown. Set a rules-based withdrawal strategy (e.g. dynamic spending, guardrails, fixed-percentage) rather than blindly withdrawing 4%/year.
- Defer State Pension if you don't need it. State Pension can be deferred at 1% per 9 weeks (~5.8% per year) — the highest guaranteed inflation-linked income available. Deferring to age 70 from 66 increases the annual State Pension by ~23%.
Tax in retirement — what catches people out
- State Pension is taxable but paid gross. Tax is collected by reducing your tax code on other income. If State Pension is your only income, no tax. If you also have £20,000 of pension income, that £20,000 is taxed at 20% on most of it.
- Drawdown income uses your Personal Allowance. Withdrawing £12,570/year of taxable pension income while State Pension hasn't started is tax-free.
- Big single withdrawals can over-tax via emergency code. Pension providers apply Month 1 emergency tax on first withdrawals. The over-tax is reclaimable via P55 form or year-end reconciliation.
- Death before 75 — pension passes free of income tax to beneficiaries.
- Death after 75 — pension is taxable to beneficiaries at their s annuities (. Drawdown is the inheritance-friendly option vs annuities (which usually die with the holder).
Sources and methodology
Annuity quotes from MoneyHelper annuity comparison. MPAA framework from gov.uk Pension Annual Allowance. Lump Sum Allowance from gov.uk LSA guidance. UK Safe Withdrawal Rate research from Pfau (2024) and Stamford Brook (2023).
UK Tax Drag is educational and not regulated financial advice — see the disclaimer for the full position.
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